Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Thursday, February 19, 2015
One of the three
policemen who were jailed 25 years each for their involvement in the infamous
MV Benjamin cocaine case was reportedly caught with wee at the Nsawam Medium
Security Prisons where he is being kept.
A Daily Guide source
said the incident occurred last Friday at Annex Block Cell 2 where Lance
Corporal Dwamena Yebson was.
According to the
source, Yebson is able make arrangements to get stuff like wee, alcohol and
even mobile phones into the highly restricted facility due to his positions as
‘National Leader’ of the prisoners and had been engaging in such illegal
activities for long time.
The source said the
contrabands are mostly included in authorized stuff brought into the prisons.
Yebson reportedly
receives tacit support from some of the senior officers at the facility and as
a result did not respect some of the junior officers.
The source said when
he was caught with the wee, he later called all the leaders in the prisons to
calm their nerves because he claimed some of the officers were going to ‘rescue’
him.
Prisons Headquarters
When reached via
telephone, Vitalis Aiyeh, Chief Public Relations Officer of the Ghana Prisons
Service said no report of that nature had come to the attention of the
Headquarters in Accra.
“I don’t know of
anybody like this and you know Nsawam has three thousand plus prisoners so I
have to crosscheck. I just tried Nsawam and I did not get the officer in charge.”
He said he was
attending some radio programmes and could not readily find out.
When the reporter
said he will call later for confirmation, he said “why not just contact Nsawam.
You can just go there for your side of investigations. From where I sit, it is
difficult for me to know the details.”
When told Nsawam is a
restricted area and one would need clearance from the Headquarters in Accra, the
Chief PRO said “then you have to write to seek clearance. That is the right
thing. You write and you are cleared to go and do it.”
“Right now what I
have just told you is what I know. If you call anytime and I have the details I
will give them to you but sometimes it is also difficult for me to go
investigating these things. If you want to really go in there why not? You can
write and come.”
Flashback
In 2007, Yebson together
with General Sergeant David Nyarko and General Lance Corporal Peter Bondorin,
each received 25 years in jail from an Accra Fast Track High Court presided
over by Justice Anin Yeboah currently with the Supreme Court.
A fourth policeman,
Detective Sergeant Samuel Amoah, is still on the run. He jumped bail granted
him and his accomplices by an Accra Regional Tribunal while Bondorin later died
in prison.
In April 2006, they
were said to have aided Sheriff Asem Dake, the prime suspect in the disappearance
of 76 parcels of cocaine on board the MV Benjamin to escape arrest.
In July 2008, same
judge convicted and sentenced Joseph Kojo Dawson, the owner of the MV Benjamin
and Managing Director of Dashment Company Limited; Isaac Arhin, a sailor;
Phillip Bruce Arhin, a mechanic; Cui Xian Li, the vessel engineer, and Luo Yui
Xing, a sailor, all crew members of the MV Benjamin, to 25 years imprisonment
each with hard labour.
Bruce Arhin, however,
died about three weeks after his conviction.
A sixth accused
person, Pak Bok Sil, a Korean, was, on October 16, 2007, acquitted and
discharged by the court which had held, during a ruling on a submission of ‘no
case’, that the prosecution had failed to prove a case against him. His lawyer
was James Agalga, the current deputy Minister of the Interior.
Last year, Christian
Sheriff Asem Darkey, the man at the centre of the shipment and disappearance of
77 parcels of cocaine, was also sentenced to a total of 22 years in prison with
hard labour by the Accra Fast Track High Court.
The MV Benjamin,
reportedly carrying about 77 parcels of cocaine, with each parcel weighing 30
kilogrammes, docked at Kpone near Tema and discharged the parcels.
The parcels were
offloaded into a waiting vehicle and the three policemen who had a tip-off in
Tema rushed to the Kpone beach and got the helping hand of another policeman (Bondorin)
but instead followed Asem Darkey with the cocaine back to Tema where they were
all given $10,000 each.
Darkey was said to be
the person who had chartered the vessel at a cost of US$150,000 to tow another
vessel from Guinea to Ghana and, subsequently, carted the 77 parcels of cocaine.
The disappearance of
the cocaine led to the setting up of the Justice Georgina Wood Committee and
the subsequent trial of persons alleged to have played various roles in the
importation.
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